Don't Break The Seal
Watch the full video here: https://bit.ly/3RDWbSi
Financial Planners - Should you negotiate on your fees??
Some say ‘yes’, some say ‘no’…
I’m going to give you two good reasons why you should.??Then, one great reason why you absolutely shouldn’t - ever.
Argument Number One:? If offering a discount will get a client on board and you’ve already paid for the resources (Paraplanners, offices, marketing), it’s better for them to be covering some of their costs rather than being stood idle.?
I get that.?
Argument Number Two: If negotiating can bring a client on board, surely, it’s better to have 80% of the revenue coming into the business than none of the revenue??
I get that also.?
If discounting and negotiating on your fees gets a client on board, that otherwise wouldn’t be, you are at least covering your costs and driving some revenue that you wouldn’t have had.
It’s what an Accountant would say, and it makes perfect sense on a spreadsheet.?
But…. you’re not an Accountant.?
In the moment that you are delivering your pitch and explaining your fees, you are a Salesperson.?
At other times in your business, you are a Financial Planner, or a Paraplanner or a Manager or a Trainer. But, in the moment you are delivering your pitch to a client, you are a Salesperson, pure and simple.?
And selling is about confidence, not spreadsheets.?
It is both your spinach and your kryptonite.?
We all know how difficult it can be to get a client over the line sometimes, and how tempting it is to offer a discount when asked - especially if they’re a little bolshy, or perhaps a ‘really big client’.?
Surely, just a little discount can be justified to secure the deal??
The route of least resistance is difficult to resist!?
And one discount won’t hurt??
No, it probably won’t.?
But it won’t be one.?
Because, do it once and you’ve broken the seal.?
领英推荐
You’ve allowed yourself a way out. You’ve given yourself another ‘sales tool’ to get the client over the line.?
And now, every time you have a tough client, every time that doubt creeps in, every time your confidence wanes, you’ll reach for the discount.?
And worse, you’ll start offering discounts when none are needed. You’ll offer discounts to clients that you would have gotten over the line at your full fee if only you stood your ground.??
When you are up against it in any aspect of life, knowing that the only way is forward is what gets you through.?
If you give yourself an ‘out’, your pesky anxious mind will always look for it when the going gets tough.?
That single discounted customer will turn into another. And another. And another.?
Suddenly, that Accountant’s spreadsheet doesn’t look too good with every third or fourth client discounted, does it??
Don’t break the seal!?
Sure, you’ll lose the odd client that might have signed up if you’d given them a discount.
But….?
And if that is not enough, think about it this way…?
It’s better to have 90 clients paying your full fee, than 100 clients paying at 80%.?
Less work, more profit.?
Even your Accountant will agree that makes more sense.?
I want to hear from you…?
What approaches do you take to maintain client satisfaction while upholding your fee structure??
Comment below…??
Watch the full video here: https://bit.ly/3RDWbSi
For FREE trial access to 300+ training videos on the full financial planning process click here: https://bit.ly/3UIl7Yj
PlanHappy - Software, Training & Business Services for Financial Planners #financialplanning
???? B Corp Financial Planner ? Advisory Board Member SOLLA ? Chair STEP Surrey ? Co-Chair B Local Surrey ? Sustainable Financial Planning For Individuals And Businesses @ Switchfoot Wealth
11 个月Neil Parker ?? can I offer a second and arguably more important reason never to discount. Fairness. You have hit the nail on the head when you describe the slippery slope starting with the bolshy, sharp elbowed prospective client asking for the discount. Let me guess at the last clients to get the discount... The ones that need you the most, value you the most because they are in vulnerable circumstances. They don't want to risk the relationship they have too much to lose. And because they don't ask they don't get. So your vulnerable clients pay full price and your sharp elbowed clients get a discount. Does that sound fair? Does it sound like treating vulnerable customers fairly? Our vulnerable client policy states that we don't offer discounts to anyone for that reason. And we share our vulnerable client policy with every new client (on the understanding that they will one day find themselves in vulnerable circumstances and they need to know we have their back if that happens). We have carefully calibrated our fees and if we are able to reduce them we will do so for all clients in a segment, not just the pushy ones.